Administrative Styles and Policy Styles
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics
"Administrative Styles and Policy Styles" published on by Oxford University Press.
44375 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics
"Administrative Styles and Policy Styles" published on by Oxford University Press.
In: Personal relationships, Band 1, Heft 4, S. 349-369
ISSN: 1475-6811
AbstractThis study was undertaken to examine young women's and men's orientations toward love in three very different cultures: Japan (N = 223), Russia (N = 401), and the United States (N = 1,043). The love variables examined were: frequency of lore experiences, attachment types, love styles, love as a basis for marriage, romantic attitudes, and predictors of falling in love. Many cultural differences were found in the love variables, but the effect of culture was not always in the expected direction. We also examined how the pattern of gender differences in love variables differed across the three societies. Some of the gender differences and similarities found in previous love research and also in the U.S. sample of this study were not replicated in the Japanese and/or Russian samples. We discuss the importance of studying love and other aspects of close relationships with data collected from more than one culture.
In: Ebony, Band 65, Heft 10, S. 46-47
ISSN: 0012-9011
Der renommierte Journalist und Chefredakteur der nigerianischen Newswatch legt ein im angelsächsischen Stil gehaltenes "stylebook" vor, das Journalisten mit Stilformen, Konventionen und Gepflogenheiten ihrer Profession vertraut machen soll. (DÜI-Sbd)
World Affairs Online
In: Subcultural style series
The meaning of style between classic and queer -- Lesbian style : from mannish women to lipstick dykes -- Gay men's style : from macaroni to metrosexual -- Kiss of the whip : bondage, discipline and sadomasochism, or BDSM style -- Drag : of kings and queens -- Crossing genders, crossing cultures -- Conclusion : against justification
In: Subcultural style series
Introduction to subcultural body style. Toward a working definition of "subculture" -- Dress, body modification, and the subcultural body style -- Introduction(s) into subcultural research -- The urban tribal movement and subcultural body style -- Introducing subcultural body style -- Subcultural body style and dress research -- Summary -- Subcultural body style history. Historic body styles -- The body and dress -- History of the modern primitive body style within the urban tribal movement -- Implants -- Summary -- Subcultural body style and identity. Subcultural body style -- Displayed body -- Social body -- Primal body -- Ritualized body -- Spiritual body -- Phenomenological or lived body -- Summary -- Subcultural body style. Subcultural body style guidelines -- Subcultural body style as visual culture -- Noise : subcultural body style nonverbal communication -- Subcultural body style as material culture -- Marketing the subcultural body -- Subcultural body style : modern primitives and the body renaissance -- Summary -- Future of subcultural body style. Fashioning the subcultural body style -- Subcultural reactions -- Body technologies old and new -- Needles, hooks, and blood-- oh my! -- It's real to me -- Anonymity -- Church of body modification -- Mediated body -- Summary.
In: Social text, Band 28, Heft 2, S. 85-112
ISSN: 1527-1951
Formal reporting styles refer to news formats or journalistic genres within a media outlet, e.g., news stories as the standard formal reporting style but also interviews as an alternative form of journalistic coverage. Each formal reporting style or news format is associated with specific rules of how to write it. For example, the journalist has to answer the most important W-questions (Who, What, When, Where, Why) at the beginning of a news story whereas feature journalism builds up tension, that is, tells a story and the important questions are answered only in the course of the article. The interview as another example is characterized by the formal interplay between questions (interviewer) and answers (interviewee). Apart from general reporting styles (news story, interview etc.), some codebooks also measure media-specific reporting styles (e.g., Donsbach & Büttner, 2005 for television). Furthermore, reporting styles can be distinguished between "rather factual" or "rather opinionated" (Seethaler, 2015). Field of application/theoretical foundation: Formal reporting styles can be seen as a formal variable of quantitative content analyses which is therefore often part of the "standard repertoire" within codebooks that analyse journalistic (news) coverage. It can be used to identify different news formats (e.g., the share of comments in quality newspapers). It can also be used for research conducted on the norm of separating news and opinion. It may also be helpful in determining the units of analysis within analyses of news coverage. For example, if a news story is followed by an interview with a politician on the same issue, this change in the formal reporting style often means a new unit of analysis in content analyses. References/combination with other methods of data collection: Content analyses can also be combined with surveys or qualitative interviews. One example is a study by Schäfer-Hock (2018), in which he examined how journalistic reporting has changed within recent years. In order to gain more ...
BASE
In: Ebony, Band 64, Heft 10, S. 70-75
ISSN: 0012-9011
In: Journal of social and biological structures: studies in human sociobiology, Band 7, Heft 2, S. 180-182
ISSN: 0140-1750